globalchange  > 影响、适应和脆弱性
项目编号: 1452549
项目名称:
CAREER: Engineering Non-Growth Metabolism for High-Yield Biochemical Production
作者: Keith Tyo
承担单位: Northwestern University
批准年: 2014
开始日期: 2015-03-01
结束日期: 2020-02-29
资助金额: USD400000
资助来源: US-NSF
项目类别: Continuing grant
国家: US
语种: 英语
特色学科分类: Engineering - Chemical, Bioengineering, Environmental, and Transport Systems
英文关键词: proposal ; non-growth ; cell growth ; systems-level ; microbial catalyst ; biotechnology ; productive non-growth-associated biomanufacturing process ; terpene production ; work ; glycolytic metabolism ; non-growth central carbon metabolic regulation ; near optimal yield ; engineering effort ; non-growth condition ; career award ; production cost ; general non-growing cell ; non-growth product metabolism ; non-food biomass ; chemical ; biochemical engineering program ; high flux metabolism
英文摘要: 1452549
Tyo, Keith E.

Microbes are a promising catalyst to convert renewable resources such as sugars and non-food biomass into fuels and chemicals that are essential to our society. This proposal addresses a key challenge to realizing microbial catalysts, namely increasing the rate and efficiency that a microbial catalyst can produce the fuel or chemical. This proposal will substantially improve microbial catalysts by investigating the underlying enzyme regulation that limits catalyst productivity. While the regulation of many enzymes has been studied in isolation, the systems-level, condition-dependent regulation of enzymes has proved difficult to elucidate, but this understanding will be essential to engineering high productivity microbial catalysts. If successful, this proposal would impact the biomanufacturing competitiveness of the United States by reducing production costs of a wide range of drop-in replacements for diesel, jet fuel, and gasoline, as well as chemicals used to make plastics, preservatives, flavors and fragrances, and many other consumer products. The proposed work will also train students at the undergrad, master and doctoral levels through research, a new course in Global Health and Biotechnology and a certificate program in Sustainability and Global Health. The certificate will provide future biological engineers with an integrated understanding of biotechnology, challenging societal problems, and tools for market analysis and risk. The certificate will be piloted in the current proposal as a master?s program. This program will result in greater STEM educational infrastructure and promote interaction of under-represented minorities in low-income countries with STEM trainees. This will benefit our global partners through increased scientific activity and collaboration, technoeconomic analysis of country-specific societal challenges, as well as our society by training globally minded engineers.

The rationale for the proposed work is to enable high flux metabolism in the absence of cell growth for highly productive non-growth-associated biomanufacturing processes. Developing cells with fast, non-growth product metabolism would remove a major barrier to a thriving biomanufacturing economy, by optimizing substrate conversion to product without sacrificing substrate consumption for cell growth. However, many biochemical products are growth-coupled, and in general non-growing cells have low metabolic rates. The overall objective of this proposal is to identify allosteric regulation and post-translational modification (enzyme-level regulation) that represses glycolytic metabolism in non-growth conditions. The central hypothesis is that enzyme-level regulation dominates metabolic downregulation in stationary phase. The proposed work will launch two new methods for engineering and characterizing metabolic regulation and developing a systems-level understanding of non-growth central carbon metabolic regulation. The proposal will generate minimal cells at the proteomic-level, circumventing problems with genetic deletions. The proposal will also develop a method for rapid, targeted degradation of proteins to engineer bioconversions with near optimal yields by knocking down byproduct enzymes. The method will enable new biological studies, as it will be useful for making conditional mutants to perturb biological systems in new ways. The second method will identify rate-limiting enzymes, based on thermodynamics, and thus focus engineering efforts on specific enzymes. The developed workflow will determine if reactions are near equilibrium (non-rate-limiting) or away from equilibrium (rate limiting) for a broad range of industrially relevant conditions. The novel workflow will be deployed to study central carbon metabolic regulation to garner a systems-level perspective on regulation of organic acid and terpene production.

This CAREER award by the Biotechnology and Biochemical Engineering Program of the CBET Division is co-funded by the Systems and Synthetic Biology Program of the Division of Molecular and Cellular Biology.
资源类型: 项目
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/95025
Appears in Collections:影响、适应和脆弱性
气候减缓与适应

Files in This Item:

There are no files associated with this item.


Recommended Citation:
Keith Tyo. CAREER: Engineering Non-Growth Metabolism for High-Yield Biochemical Production. 2014-01-01.
Service
Recommend this item
Sava as my favorate item
Show this item's statistics
Export Endnote File
Google Scholar
Similar articles in Google Scholar
[Keith Tyo]'s Articles
百度学术
Similar articles in Baidu Scholar
[Keith Tyo]'s Articles
CSDL cross search
Similar articles in CSDL Cross Search
[Keith Tyo]‘s Articles
Related Copyright Policies
Null
收藏/分享
所有评论 (0)
暂无评论
 

Items in IR are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.